Your Gaming Mouse Could Be Spying On You, Research Finds

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Watch Out For Malware or Other Software Accessing Mouse Sensor Data!

Story Highlight
  • A mouse gathers vibrations from day-to-day verbal communication, which can be used to spy on conversations.
  • These vibrations can be easily accessed and decoded using an AI model.
  • Malicious or other software can misuse these vibrations in the worst-case scenarios.

A mouse is about as important to a PC gamer as any other component. Often, the difference between a great and an average mouse can make or break a game, so gamers end up going for the best possible option available.

These mice generally serve only one specific purpose, but a study reveals that there is a lot more to a mouse than meets the eye. In fact, under the right circumstances, a mouse can even be used to spy on you.

Why it matters: Data privacy and security are among the major problems plaguing the world today, so it’s never a bad idea to be cautious and informed when it comes to these matters.

Mouse Used For Spying
Study Shows How A Mouse Can Be Used To Spy On Gamers And PC Users 

According to Researchers at the University of California, sensors in high-resolution optical mice can detect tiny desk vibrations.

This is so interesting because when a person speaks, vibrations travel through the surface and into the mouse sensor. These readings can be easily accessed and collected if said mouse is connected to a compromised computer.

The researchers noted that this data can be made usable through a series of steps. First, raw motion data packets must be extracted while isolating vibrations from the speech.

Once this signal is processed using digital signal processing techniques, a neural network model can reconstruct the waveform for more clarity. Testing shows that this process can decipher a conversation with up to 60% accuracy, a figure that is enough to make a conversation understandable.

Also, mice with resolutions up to 20,000 DPI or more are likely to be impacted most by such a vulnerability.

While the average gamer is unlikely to be compromised through a mouse, it’s interesting to see how the emerging AI technology can impact existing hardware. Perhaps even more peripherals and devices will evolve in different ways moving forward as AI continues to grow.

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